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4/26: The Lost Generation. Why do you think there was so much upheaval and so many changes directly after World War I? Why were people suddenly eager to act so differently – why were they more willing to take risks? . Postwar Social Changes.
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4/26: The Lost Generation • Why do you think there was so much upheaval and so many changes directly after World War I? Why were people suddenly eager to act so differently – why were they more willing to take risks?
Postwar Social Changes • The catastrophe of World War I shattered the sense of optimism that had grown in the West since the Enlightenment • In reaction, the society and culture of Europe, the United States, and many other parts of the world experienced rapid changes
Changes in Society After World War I • During the 1920s, new technologies helped create a mass culture shared by millions in the world’s developed countries • Affordable cars, improved telephones, and new forms of media brought people around the world closer together than ever before
The Roaring Twenties • In the 1920s, African-Americans combined Western harmonies with African rhythms to create jazz • Jazz musicians, like trumpeter Louis Armstrong and pianist Duke Ellington, took simple melodies and improvised endless subtle variations in rhythm and beat
After the war, rebellious young people, disillusioned by the war, rejected the moral values and rules of the Victorian Age and chased after excitement • One symbol of rebellious Jazz Age youth was the liberated young woman called the flapper
Women’s Lives • Although most women left jobs when the war ended, their war work helped them win the vote in many Western countries • A few women were elected to public office, such as Texas governor Miriam Ferguson or Lady Nancy Astor, the first woman to serve in British Parliament
By the 1920s, labor-saving devices had become common in middle-class homes • Washing machines, vacuum cleaners, and canned foods lightened the burden of household chores • Some women then sought work outside the home or did volunteer work to help the less fortunate
Many Americans supported Prohibition, a ban on the manufacture and sale of alcoholic beverages • The Eighteenth Amendment supported Prohibition
Prohibition was meant to keep people from the negative effects of drinking • Instead, it caused an explosion of organized crime and speakeasies, or illegal bars • The Amendment was repealed in 1933
The Scopes Trial • In 1925, a biology teacher in Tennessee named John Scopes was tried for teaching evolution in his classroom • His action broke a law that barred any teaching that went against the Bible’s version of creation
A Loss of Faith • To many postwar writers, the war symbolized the moral breakdown of Western civilization • Many authors, including Ernest Hemingway, F. Scott Fitzgerald and Gertrude Stein, left the United States and moved to Paris • They were referred to as the “lost generation”
T.S. Eliot: The Waste Land APRIL is the cruellest month, breeding Lilacs out of the dead land, mixing Memory and desire, stirring Dull roots with spring rain
Also during the 1920s, an African-American cultural awakening called the Harlem Renaissance began in Harlem, a neighborhood in New York City that was home to many African-Americans
Einstein: Theory of Relativity • In 1905 and 1916, the German-born physicist Albert Einstein introduced his theories of relativity • Einstein argued that measurements of space and time are not absolute but are determined by the relative position of the observer
To the general public, Einstein’s ideas were difficult to understand • They seemed to further reinforce the unsettling sense of a universe whirling beyond the understanding of human reason
Fleming Discovers Penicillin • In 1928, Scottish scientist Sigmund Freud also challenged faith in reason • He suggested that the subconscious mind drives much of human behavior • Freud pioneered psychoanalysis, a method of studying how the mind works and treating mental disorders
New Directions in Painting • Spanish artist Pablo Picasso and French artist Georges Braque created a revolutionary new style called cubism • Cubism painted three-dimensional objects as complex patterns of angles and planes, as if they were composed of fragmented parts
Looking Ahead • Stunned by the trauma of World War I, many people sought to change the way they thought and acted during the turbulent 1920s • As nations recovered from the war, people began to feel hope rising out of their disillusionment • But soon, the “lost generation” would face a new crisis – the Great Depression